Tuesday, 2 February 2016

Mumbra Hoax call by disgruntled Pakistani relative

Hoax caller from 'Peshawar' sends ATS on wild goose chase

A Pakistani national from Dubai gave
Thane and Navi Mumbai policemen — as well as a 40-year-old Mumbra man —
two sleepless nights with his prank calls last week.

Nadeem Shaikh, who was picked up by the ATS for questioning, feels this was a revenge plot by his brother-in-law

The hoaxer, identified as Hafeez Rehman, called the Navi Mumbai
police control room on January 29 to ‘warn’ that Mumbra resident Nadeem
Shaikh was sheltering four jihadis who have entered India to carry out a
massacre in a city school. Rehman made two calls each to the Navi
Mumbai and Thane control rooms.

Turned out Rehman is a Pakistani
national living in Dubai and married to Shaikh’s cousin. With Shaikh
advising his cousin, Shabnam, to snap ties with the abusive Rehman and
return to India, the Pakistani wanted to teach his brother-in-law a
lesson. And with Mumbra being in the news for some of its residents’
alleged links to the ISIS, Rehman thought the best way to fix Shaikh was
to paint him as a jihadi. With the call coming just days after the arrest of a man living in
the very same colony as Shaikh alleged to be the ISIS’s main recruiter
in India, the police went into a tizzy.

They put Shaikh under surveillance for all of Friday, before
detaining him on Saturday. Only when they told him the name of the
caller did Shaikh realise what his devious brother-in-law was up to. He
explained the family situation to the police, who have let him go but
kept him under observation. The police have made a diary entry of the
incident and are exploring what action they can take against Rehman.

Multiple calls

The drama began at 2.41 pm on
January 29, when the Navi Mumbai control room received a call. Police
Naik RJ Gawde answered the call.

Gawde connected the caller to Assistant Police Inspector Santosh
Sawant. The caller identified himself as Hafeez Rehman from Peshawar in
Pakistan and asked Sawant if he followed Urdu. When Sawant replied he
knew Hindi, the caller continued in Hindi.

“Hafeez Saeed ko pehchante ho?” he asked. “Saeed ne chaar jan India
bheje hai, jo ek school mein kuch kaand karne waale hai. Woh Mumbra me
rehnewale hai.” (Hafeez Saeed has sent four people into India and they
are going to attack a school and will be staying in Mumbra.)

As the cops alerted the ATS, the control room received another call
from Rehman at 2.45 pm. This time he told them he was speaking from
Multan.

A few minutes later, the Thane control room also received similar
calls. All the calls were reported to the ATS who immediately activated
their local assets in Mumbra.

Why so serious?

The ATS took the call very
seriously as, only on January 22, a joint team of the National
Investigation Agency and the ATS arrested Mudabbir Shaikh, 34, from his
Amrut Nagar residence in Mumbra. Mudabbir had told his interrogators that he was the recruiter for
ISIS in India and was operating from his home for the last three years.
He was called ‘the Amir’ and was direct touch with the Iraq-based Yusuf
Al Hindi.

The ATS officers first put the house under surveillance on Friday and
on Saturday detained Shaikh, a father of two who works as a manager at
the Shaadi Mahal wedding hall five minutes from his home.

“After we received the calls, we asked our local network to keep a
watch at the address,” said a senior Maharashtra ATS officer. “We also
started gathering information about Shaikh, as we doubted that if they
are going to attack on school they would be heavily armed. We thought
they could attack us also if we stormed the house. Our first suspicion
was this was an ISIS module in Mumbra put together by Mudabbir.”

On Saturday, the ATS decided to detain and interrogate Shaikh. "We interrogated him thoroughly, but he was not ready to accept
anything,” said the officer. “We then switched tactics and tried to gain
his confidence to see if he would reveal anything. When we mentioned
the caller’s name, Shaikh was shocked and told us everything about the
domestic dispute between his cousin and her husband.”

The ATS checked Shaikh’s call records and nothing suspicious was
found. He also arranged for the officers to speak to his cousin, who
corroborated his version. They also questioned his neighbours who told
them Shaikh was a pious man who kept to himself and was not on any
social media. Finally, they found that the hoax call too came from the
Dubai locality where Shabnam lived.
“Shabnam and Rehman were happy and have a child,” said the officer.
“But a few months ago, he started getting violent and she used to tell
Nadeem about it. Nadeem told her to register a case and return to India.

When Rehman learnt about this, he wanted to teach Shaikh a lesson.
He thought the police will arrest Shaikh and torture him. We released
Nadeem after taking his statement and are keeping a watch on him.”
When mid-day visited Shaikh on Tuesday, he was out. When we called
him, he confirmed his detention but didn’t want to elaborate. “I was
helping my cousin Shabnam to return to India as her husband was
harassing her,” Shaikh told mid-day. “Rehman wanted to teach me a lesson
and called the control room with false information. Everything is
sorted now.” added Shaikh assure for an interview with the reporter, but
switch off his phone later.
As for Rehman, the police have made a station diary entry about the
hoax call and are considering registering a case against him.